Revolut's chairman just dropped an interesting take on the UK's latest budget moves. According to him, the new measures aimed at luring companies to list on the London Stock Exchange could be a genuine game-changer for its global standing.
Here's the thing: LSE has been losing ground to rivals in New York and Asia for years. Companies have been choosing elsewhere for IPOs, and it's been bleeding competitiveness. But these fresh policy tweaks? They might just flip the script.
What makes this particularly relevant now is how exchanges worldwide are scrambling to position themselves for the next wave of digital asset listings and tokenized securities. A stronger LSE doesn't just mean more traditional stocks—it could signal Europe getting serious about competing in the Web3 capital markets space.
Revolut's backing carries weight here. They've navigated regulatory mazes across continents, so when their leadership says these changes matter, it's worth paying attention. The real test? Whether these measures translate into actual listings or just make for good policy headlines.
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HashRateHermit
· 11-30 03:50
Nah, really? Can LSE still turn things around? New York has already rubbed Europe's grandpa on the ground.
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CryptoTarotReader
· 11-28 17:07
That being said, whether LSE can truly turn things around this time depends on actual actions... It's easy to talk pretty, but only bringing Web3 projects in counts.
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BoredRiceBall
· 11-27 10:51
Can LSE really turn things around this time? I doubt it. It's been said every year and still gets beaten by New York... The chair of Revolut talks beautifully, but it's just talk.
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ShitcoinConnoisseur
· 11-27 10:49
Bro, does this wave of policies really rely on LSE turning around? I think we still have to see how many projects can actually bring in real money; otherwise, it's just another round of hot air.
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LoneValidator
· 11-27 10:39
It's hard to say whether LSE can turn things around this time. Having favourable information from policies is far from enough; it really depends on how many real projects can attract substantial investments moving forward.
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OffchainWinner
· 11-27 10:38
Can lse turn the tide this time? Trust them once, after all, the opportunity in web3 is right there.
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NotFinancialAdvice
· 11-27 10:26
Whether lse can truly turn things around this time depends on whether there are actual companies willing to go public in the future; just shouting slogans is useless.
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HalfPositionRunner
· 11-27 10:25
Those people always think about turning things around but can never do it, just enjoy the show.
Revolut's chairman just dropped an interesting take on the UK's latest budget moves. According to him, the new measures aimed at luring companies to list on the London Stock Exchange could be a genuine game-changer for its global standing.
Here's the thing: LSE has been losing ground to rivals in New York and Asia for years. Companies have been choosing elsewhere for IPOs, and it's been bleeding competitiveness. But these fresh policy tweaks? They might just flip the script.
What makes this particularly relevant now is how exchanges worldwide are scrambling to position themselves for the next wave of digital asset listings and tokenized securities. A stronger LSE doesn't just mean more traditional stocks—it could signal Europe getting serious about competing in the Web3 capital markets space.
Revolut's backing carries weight here. They've navigated regulatory mazes across continents, so when their leadership says these changes matter, it's worth paying attention. The real test? Whether these measures translate into actual listings or just make for good policy headlines.